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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Bb-Temperature sensors

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2006 Toyota bB temperature sensors — what they do and how to look after them

Temperature sensors are absolutely used on the 2006 Toyota bB. Toyota service information and wiring diagrams for the 2006 bB (QNC2# series) specify an Engine Coolant Temperature (ECT) sensor to the ECM (THW circuit) and an Intake Air Temperature (IAT) element in the intake tract (THA circuit). Standard OBD‑II diagnostics on this model also include temperature-related fault codes (for example, P0115–P0119 for ECT and P0110–P0114 for IAT), which confirms the bB relies on these sensors for engine management and cooling fan control.

On the 2006 Toyota bB, temperature sensors quietly do a mountain of work. The ECT sensor tracks how hot the coolant is and tells the engine computer how to fuel and time the engine, when to kick the radiator fans on, and how the idle should behave when it’s cold or stinking hot. The reading is also used to drive the dash gauge via the network, so the driver sees a stable, truthful temperature under the bonnet. The IAT sensor helps the computer adjust fuelling and spark based on the temperature of the air coming into the engine — critical for crisp starts, smooth running, and good economy from cold mornings to summer scorchers. Some trims also use an ambient sensor for the air‑con to balance cabin comfort.

There’s no set replacement interval for these sensors — they’re changed on condition. Tell‑tales include hard cold starts, lumpy idle, poor fuel economy, fans running constantly, the gauge misbehaving, or the check engine light with temperature‑related fault codes. A quick scan‑tool check comparing live data to actual conditions (e.g., stone‑cold engine showing close to outside air temp) is the easiest first step. When in doubt, resistance‑versus‑temperature testing against the workshop specs will confirm a lazy or failed sensor.

When replacing the ECT sensor, it pays to do it right: work on a cold engine, relieve any cooling system pressure, and be ready to top up with the correct Toyota long‑life coolant and bleed out air. Use an OEM‑quality sensor and a new sealing washer if specified — avoid thread tape unless the manual calls for it. After fitting, clear codes and verify the fans cycle and the gauge sits where it should once warmed up. Keeping the cooling system healthy with fresh coolant at the intervals in the Toyota schedule (typically in the 5‑year/100,000–160,000 km range depending on coolant type) is cheap insurance, and a quick check of connectors and grounds during services helps prevent intermittent faults. A tidy harness on the THW/THA circuits and a leak‑free cooling system mean the bB’s temperature readings stay accurate, the fuel bill stays sensible, and the engine lives a long, happy life.

  • Watch for ECT/IAT fault codes and odd fan or gauge behaviour.
  • Test before replacing, verify readings with a scan tool when cold and hot.
  • Use correct coolant and bleed the system after any ECT sensor work.

FAQ

Where is the engine coolant temperature sensor on a 2006 Toyota bB?

On most 2006 Toyota bB models (QNC2# series), the ECT sensor is threaded into the coolant outlet/thermostat housing area on the engine, with a two‑pin connector. It sits where it can “see” coolant flow, making warm‑up and fan control accurate. If visibility is tight, a small mirror and torch help spot the connector and wiring.

A scan tool reading of the ECT when the engine is stone cold should be close to outside air temperature — that’s a handy way to confirm you’ve found and are testing the right sensor.

Can a faulty temperature sensor cause rough idle or poor fuel economy?

Yes. If the ECT reads colder than reality, the ECU enriches the mixture and may hold a higher idle, chewing through fuel. If it reads hotter than reality, the mixture can go too lean, causing hesitation or pinging. The IAT also trims fuelling and timing — a failed IAT can knock the edge off throttle response and economy.

Sorting a dodgy sensor often restores clean starts, steady idle, and normal fan behaviour, while trimming back fuel use.

Do the bB’s dash gauge and ECU share the same temperature sensor?

Typically, yes. On the 2006 bB the two‑wire ECT feeds the engine computer, and the cluster receives temperature information over the vehicle network. There isn’t usually a separate, old‑school gauge sender. Some market variants may add extra switches for fans or A/C logic, but the main coolant temperature input is a single ECT sensor.

If the gauge and scan data disagree, that’s a clue to check wiring, grounds, or the cluster rather than the sensor itself.

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